68 Go ahe ad and pamper yourself If you hanker for luxuries you can't afford, be comforted by the fact that you've got lots of company. But occasionally (if you're lucky) you'll find true luxury that isn't too costly. . . and that's the time to go ahead and pamper yourself. Today is your day! And here is luxury and quality personified: a Cashmere. Lambswool sport coat by Hart Schaffner & Marx. It's regal and casual . . . loomed with loving care by Scottish masters These craftsmen have taken full advan- ,.... ...;., ./ '. ,*. , . 'So f ., < /. ..: )) ::->>. 'I l '. Y.Y. J " '*'. A ( -\ 4 < .. '^ ./.../6 ,(<. , \ .. ,.ç. "'*"ó< < t '1- '" .J.." ..... at ...^-""I. ^"" ..rø :; \ '",,' ,;: ,"'- . . 1 .... .... ""'?: : > ' \ *' < " " ".:':' ;:::";.t ;:.." x: Today is your day tage of the wonderful silkiness of fine cash- mere, the downy buoyancy of lambswool, and combined them in a superlatively soft fabric that is a delight to touch and wear. SpeakIng of wear, you'll wear your dis- tinctive, patterned sport coat for your most important casual-occasions. You'll appre- ciate the beauty and feel of the fabric, its true luxuriousness. And you'll soon get used to the complimentary comments It seems to inspire. We meant to mention that this particu- lar lambswool is an especially superior quahty. It's shorn from accommodating lambs not a day over seven months old, and that's why it's so naturally soft and elegant. Ease into one of these luxurious coats for an immediate answer to tthow luxu- rious can you get?" At these and many other fine dealer stores: Wash., D. C.. Raleigh Haberdasher Richmond.... . . . Miller & Rhoads Chicago. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Baskin Dallas. . . . . . . . J as. K. Wilson @ Phoenix................ . Hannys Seattle, Tacoma. . . . Klopfenstein's !1 HART SCHAFFNER & M \RX was formidable as a fairy godmother in the Disney "Medea" and rather hor- ribly relaxed in a parody of an Italian film. On the whole, the gentlemen were less memorable, but I liked Max- well Grant and Mel Larned in a piece conclusively demonstratIng that there is no such man as Gilbert Miller, though this sketch, like several others, could have done with a little professional edit- ing, and they were also serviceable in jobs about the Reader's Digest and group psychoanalysis, and, with the ladies, in some of the items already named. The music was provided by Charles Strouse and Liza Redfield, on two pianos, and Stan Koor, on drums. They were very agreeable, and so were most of the tunes they played. The other credits are too complex for me (in addi- tion to the twelve members of the cast , about another dozen names are listed in the program), and I can only express my gratitude and admiration for every- body concerned. -WOLCOTT GIBBS . \ ' ART FROM ITS VERY BEGINNING [From the Urbana (Ohio) Citizen] Art from its very beginning, was out- lined by Mrs James McGraw when she spoke Tuesday evening at a dinner meet- ing of the Soroptimist Club in Ewing's pri- vate dining room. Mrs. McGraw, introduced by Mrs. E. J. Williams, program chairman, related that the first trace of art was found in the catacombs in Rome. "Leonardo Da Vinci, the greatest artist ever known and whose most famous paint- ing was the Mona Lisa, was also an engi- neer, sculptor, poet, artist and musician. He was a wonderful observationist," Mrs. McGraw said. "Michaelangelo, whose best work was 'The Last Judgment,' was also a great sculptor and was commissioned to do the Sixteen Chapel Walls. "Raphael, who painted The Madonna, also worked in the chapel of Julian II. Tishing was best known for painting the body in the nude. Velasquez of Spain was a court painter and his most famous work was 'The Spinners.' Rembrandt, a won- derful portrait painter, was most famous for his etchings Reuben in his lifetime executed 4,000 paintings," Mrs. McGraw said in concluding her most interesting talk. . '.1 While we are, so it seems, continually worried and perturbed over how many Communists may be hunting out our secrets and planning on that day when they can take over our country, it is refreshing to know that there are 162,922 Americans who are NOT members of the Communist party-the figures of J. Edgar Hoover and his Federal Bureau of Intelligence. -Moscow (Idaho) Idahonzan. Somehow, we are not refreshed. d .; ,,; If These are the airlines... that wzll get you there wzth speed and luxury by Douglas Listed below are the leading air- lines that fly the fast, luxurious, four-engine Douglas DC-6 DC- 6B, or new DC-7 series airplanes: AEROLINEAS ARGENTINAS AIGLE AZUR * AIR ALGERIE *AIRWORK ALiT ALIA AMERICAN AIRLINES AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL AIRWAYS BRANIFF INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS CANADIAN PACIFIC AIR LINES CATHAY PACIFIC AIRWAYS CONTINENTAL AIR LINES DEL T A-C&S AIR LINES *EASTERN AIR LINES FLYING TIGER LINE JAPAN AIR LINES KLM ROYAL DUTCH AIRLINES LINEA AEREA NACIONAl DE CHILE LlNEE AEREE IT ALiANE MEXICANA DE A VIA CION NATIONAL AIRLINES NORTH AMERICAN AIRLINES NORTHWEST AIRLINES PANAGRA PAN AMERICAN WORLD AIRWAYS SABENA BELGIAN WORLD AIRLINES SCANDINAVIAN AIRLINES SYSTEM SLICK AIRWAYS *SOUTH AFRICAN AIRWAYS SWISSAIR TASMAN EMPIRE AIRWAYS TRANS CARIBBEAN AIRWAYS TRANSPORTS AERIENS INTERCONTINENT AUX UNION AEROMARITIME DE TRANSPORT UNITED AIR LINES WESTERN AIR LINES *F1yi ng soon Twice es many people fly S 85 ell other airplanes comblned